Real-time MRI

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Real-time magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) refers to the continuous monitoring ("filming") of moving objects in real time. Because MRI
is based on time-consuming scanning of k-space, real-time MRI was possible only with low image quality or low temporal resolution.
Using an iterative reconstruction algorithm these limitations have recently been removed: a new method for real-time MRI achieves a temporal resolution of 20 to 30 milliseconds for images with an in-plane resolution of 1.5 to 2.0 mm.[2]
Real-time MRI promises to add important information about diseases of the joints and the heart. In many cases MRI examinations may become easier and
more comfortable for patients.

Contents

While early applications were based on echo planar imaging, which found an important application in Real-Time functional MRI (rt-fMRI),[3] recent progress is based on iterative reconstruction and FLASH MRI.[4][5] The real-time imaging method proposed by Uecker and colleagues[2] combines radial FLASH MRI,[6] which offers
rapid and continuous data acquisition, motion robustness, and tolerance to undersampling,
with an iterative image reconstruction method based on the formulation of image reconstruction as a nonlinearinverse problem.[7][8]
By integrating the data from multiple receive coils (i.e. parallel MRI) and exploiting the redundancy in the time series of images with the use of regularization and filtering, this approach enhances the possible degree of data undersampling by one order of magnitude, so that high-quality images may be obtained out of as little as 5 to 10% of the data required for a normal image reconstruction.

Because of the very short echo times (e.g., 1 to 2 milliseconds), the method does not suffer from off-resonance effects, so that the images neither exhibit susceptibility artifacts nor rely on fat suppression. While spoiled FLASH sequences offer spin density or T1 contrast, versions with refocused or fully balanced gradients provide access to T1/T2 contrast. The choice of the gradient-echo time (e.g., in-phase vs opposed-phase conditions) further alters the representation of water and fat signals in the images and will allow for separate water/fat movies.

Although applications of real-time MRI cover a broad spectrum ranging from non-medical studies of turbulent flow[9] to the noninvasive monitoring of interventional (surgical) procedures, the most important application making use of the new capabilities is cardiovascular imaging.[1]
With the new method it is possible to obtain movies of the beating heart in real time with up to 50 frames per second during free breathing and
without the need for a synchronization to the electrocardiogram.[10]